How to Raise Your Cleaning Prices Without Losing Half Your Clients
Let's be honest: putting your prices up is one of the most stressful things you do as a self-employed cleaner. You've been charging the same hourly rate for two years, your own costs have gone up, and every time you think about telling a client, you imagine them saying "actually, we'll leave it there, thanks." So you don't ask. And you quietly fall further behind.
Here's the thing — most clients expect a price rise eventually. What unsettles them isn't the increase, it's being caught off guard, or feeling like the number was plucked out of thin air. Get those two things right and the vast majority of good clients will simply say "no problem."
Why cleaners undercharge for years
It usually isn't about the money itself. It's that there's no system. When your rate lives only in your head and in a few text messages, raising it feels personal — like you're asking a favour. The fix is to make the rate part of how your business runs, not a one-off awkward conversation.
That's exactly what a written agreement does. When your rate sits in a signed document with a line that says fees are reviewed once a year, the annual review stops being a confrontation and becomes admin. You're not asking — you're doing the thing the agreement already says you'll do.
When to put prices up
- Once a year, at a predictable time. Many cleaners use January or the start of the new tax year in April. Pick one and stick to it so clients come to expect it.
- Give plenty of notice. Four weeks is reasonable and is what a good service agreement specifies. It shows respect and gives clients no grounds to feel ambushed.
- Never on the day. Turning up and announcing a new rate is the fastest way to lose someone, however fair the number.
The actual words to use
You don't need a speech. A short, warm, confident message does it:
"Hi Sarah — just letting you know my hourly rate will increase from £X to £Y from 1st April. This is my annual review and the first increase in [time]. Everything else stays exactly the same. Thank you as always for being a brilliant client."
Notice what that does: it's specific, it frames the rise as routine ("annual review"), it reassures them nothing else changes, and it ends on warmth. No apology, no long justification — apologising signals you don't think you're worth it.
Handle the awkward replies before they happen
A small number of clients will push back. That's normal and it's fine.
- If they ask why, point to your costs and the fact you've held the rate for a long time. You don't owe a line-by-line breakdown.
- If they ask to keep the old rate, you can hold firm politely, or offer a slightly reduced scope at the old price — your call.
- If someone leaves over a fair, well-notified increase, they were usually the client who'd have caused the next problem too. Raising prices is also how you quietly upgrade your client list.
Make it routine, not a battle
The cleaners who raise prices comfortably aren't braver than you — they just have the rate written down, a review date baked in, and a notice period agreed up front. That's what turns "I'm dreading this conversation" into "I sent the standard notice."
If your rate currently lives in your head and a few old texts, that's the real thing to fix first. A clear service agreement with a fees-and-review clause does the heavy lifting, so next April it's a two-line message, not a sleepless week.
💰 Price changes in writing. Any rate change should be reflected in your contract for cleaners — here's how to draft one that protects both sides.
All your cleaning documents, ready in 2 minutes
Service Contract, Key Holding Agreement, Cancellation Policy, Insurance Disclaimer and Invoice Template — autofill your details once and every document updates.
Get the full pack — £29/yr →These articles are general guidance for UK self-employed cleaners, not legal advice. Our documents are editable templates and a starting point — adapt them to your situation.